Pulmonary vasospasm in systemic sclerosis: noninvasive techniques for detection

作者:Keir Gregory J*; Nair Arjun; Giannarou Stamatia; Yang Guang Zhong; Oldershaw Paul; Wort S John; MacDonald Peter; Hansell David M; Wells Athol U
来源:Pulmonary Circulation, 2015, 5(3): 498-505.
DOI:10.1086/682221

摘要

In a subgroup of patients with systemic sclerosis (SSc), vasospasm affecting the pulmonary circulation may contribute to worsening respiratory symptoms, including dyspnea. Noninvasive assessment of pulmonary blood flow (PBF), utilizing inert-gas rebreathing (IGR) and dual-energy computed-tomography pulmonary angiography (DE-CTPA), may be useful for identifying pulmonary vasospasm. Thirty-one participants (22 SSc patients and 9 healthy volunteers) underwent PBF assessment with IGR and DE-CTPA at baseline and after provocation with a cold-air inhalation challenge (CACh). Before the study investigations, participants were assigned to subgroups: group A included SSc patients who reported increased breathlessness after exposure to cold air (n = 11), group B included SSc patients without cold-air sensitivity (n = 11), and group C patients included the healthy volunteers. Median change in PBF from baseline was compared between groups A, B, and C after CACh. Compared with groups B and C, in group A there was a significant decline in median PBF from baseline at 10 minutes (-10%; range: -52.2% to 4.0%; P < 0.01), 20 minutes (-17.4%; -27.9% to 0.0%; P < 0.01), and 30 minutes (-8.5%; -34.4% to 2.0%; P < 0.01) after CACh. There was no significant difference in median PBF change between groups B or C at any time point and no change in pulmonary perfusion on DE-CTPA. Reduction in pulmonary blood flow following CACh suggests that pulmonary vasospasm may be present in a subgroup of patients with SSc and may contribute to worsening dyspnea on exposure to cold.

  • 出版日期2015-9